Insights into the visitations of oceanic manta rays at cleaning stations on coral reefs in the Bird's Head Seascape, eastern Indonesia DOI Creative Commons
Edy Setyawan,

Ronald Mambrasar,

Abraham B. Sianipar

et al.

Frontiers in Fish Science, Journal Year: 2024, Volume and Issue: 2

Published: Aug. 16, 2024

The globally endangered oceanic manta ray Mobula birostris is believed to spend significantly more time in the open ocean than coastal areas. Nonetheless, Bird's Head Seascape (BHS) eastern Indonesia hosts a large population of this species (over 850 individuals), frequently sighted at coral reef cleaning stations and forming vital asset for marine tourism region. Despite this, detailed understanding movements habitat use wide-ranging within shallow (< 30 m) ecosystems remains limited. Addressing knowledge gap urgently required sustainable management ray-focused Here, we report results an initial passive acoustic telemetry study investigating by rays. Forty-one rays were acoustically tracked from February 2016 August 2019 array 28 receivers deployed known hypothesized transit points across BHS (including regions Raja Ampat, Fakfak, Kaimana). A total 5,822 detections recorded 16 all tagged individuals, 421 visitation events documented 37 out 41 providing valuable insights into their patterns stations. Tagged individuals detected receiver durations ranging 0.2 427.0 min (mean ± SD = 48 64 min). Notably, 94% during daylight hours (reaching peak noon), underscoring apparent diurnal pattern spent around frequent short-range between adjacent (5–12 km apart), with two-thirds 191 occurring neighboring southern Ampat. repeatedly three which previously only hosting rays, suggesting likely also utilize these Our provides important visitations local stations, will inform effective conservation efforts BHS.

Language: Английский

Fifteen Years of Marine Biodiversity in the Journal Diversity and the Importance of Publishing Natural History Field Notes DOI Creative Commons
Bert W. Hoeksema

Diversity, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: 17(4), P. 267 - 267

Published: April 10, 2025

Diversity’s Special Issue “15th Anniversary of Diversity—Biodiversity, Conservation and Ecology Animals, Plants Microorganisms” was launched in 2024 to celebrate 15 years the journal’s existence since its founding 2009 [...]

Language: Английский

Citations

0

Staying Close to Home: Horizontal Movements of Satellite-Tracked Reef Manta Rays Mobula alfredi (Krefft, 1868) in the World’s Largest Manta Sanctuary DOI Creative Commons
Edy Setyawan, Abraham B. Sianipar,

Ronald Mambrasar

et al.

Fishes, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: 10(2), P. 66 - 66

Published: Feb. 5, 2025

Indonesia is home to significant populations of globally vulnerable reef manta rays (Mobula alfredi) in at least four key regions: Berau, Nusa Penida, Komodo, and Raja Ampat. Despite detailed population studies each these regions, little known about their horizontal movement patterns. Our study used satellite telemetry investigate rays’ habitat use ranges. A total 33 were tagged with SPLASH10F-321A tags across the Berau (n = 5), Penida 8), Komodo 6), Ampat 14), yielding usable data from 25 tags. The tracked for 7 118 days (mean ± SD 50 30) July 2014 2022. results showed localized movements, strong residency near tagging sites, high site fidelity as evidenced by area-restricted search (ARS) behaviors frequent revisitations. Most restricted ranges region, no connectivity between regions. Across individuals, range (95% utilization distributions) varied significantly, ranging 19 48,294 km2 4667 10,354). These findings offer important insights into spatial patterns Indonesia, allowing formulation more effective management strategies.

Language: Английский

Citations

0

Insights into the visitations of oceanic manta rays at cleaning stations on coral reefs in the Bird's Head Seascape, eastern Indonesia DOI Creative Commons
Edy Setyawan,

Ronald Mambrasar,

Abraham B. Sianipar

et al.

Frontiers in Fish Science, Journal Year: 2024, Volume and Issue: 2

Published: Aug. 16, 2024

The globally endangered oceanic manta ray Mobula birostris is believed to spend significantly more time in the open ocean than coastal areas. Nonetheless, Bird's Head Seascape (BHS) eastern Indonesia hosts a large population of this species (over 850 individuals), frequently sighted at coral reef cleaning stations and forming vital asset for marine tourism region. Despite this, detailed understanding movements habitat use wide-ranging within shallow (< 30 m) ecosystems remains limited. Addressing knowledge gap urgently required sustainable management ray-focused Here, we report results an initial passive acoustic telemetry study investigating by rays. Forty-one rays were acoustically tracked from February 2016 August 2019 array 28 receivers deployed known hypothesized transit points across BHS (including regions Raja Ampat, Fakfak, Kaimana). A total 5,822 detections recorded 16 all tagged individuals, 421 visitation events documented 37 out 41 providing valuable insights into their patterns stations. Tagged individuals detected receiver durations ranging 0.2 427.0 min (mean ± SD = 48 64 min). Notably, 94% during daylight hours (reaching peak noon), underscoring apparent diurnal pattern spent around frequent short-range between adjacent (5–12 km apart), with two-thirds 191 occurring neighboring southern Ampat. repeatedly three which previously only hosting rays, suggesting likely also utilize these Our provides important visitations local stations, will inform effective conservation efforts BHS.

Language: Английский

Citations

2